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Searching with a thematic focus on Peacebuilding, Conflict and security, Rising powers in international development in India

Showing 1-10 of 10 results

  • Document

    Challenges in designing counterinsurgency policy: an institutionalist perspective

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    Research on India's counterinsurgency practice is divided intotwo categories. One emphasises moderation in the use of coercive power, while the other highlights its wanton abuse.
  • Document

    India in the missile technology control regime: prospects and implications

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    India formally applied for membership to the Missile Technology IControl Regime in June 2015 as part of efforts to integrate itself with the global non-proliferation architecture.
  • Document

    Rethinking security in the 21st Century: Jodhpur Security Dialogue 2014

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    India's neighbourhood is unique: It has about 15,106 km of international border; 7,000 km of it with two nuclear powers, who share close strategic ties with each other. With most of the remaining neighbouring countries, India has long-standing bilateral security-related problems.
  • Document

    India and Japan: changing dimensions of partnership in the post-Cold War period

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2010
    The evolution of Japan's post-war relations with most Asian countries was largely governed by two factors the legacies of the Second World War and the compulsions of the Cold War. While the Southeast Asian region posed formidable diplomatic challenges to Japan, South Asia provided a soothing contrast.
  • Document

    China-Japan-Korea: Tangled relationships

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2013
    Territorial disputes between China and Japan over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea and between Japan and South Korea over the Takeshima/Dokdo islands in the Sea of Japan have, particularly in the second half of 2012, given rise to concerns about peace and security in North East Asia. Because China, Japan and South Korea
  • Document

    Rising powers and the African security landscape

    Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway, 2014
    As the rising powers of China, Brazil, India and South Africa extend their economic engagement in Africa, they are also gradually becoming more involved in the African peace and security agenda. The four articles in this report describe and analyse how these rising powers are engaging with the African security landscape:
  • Document

    Implementing the responsibility to protect: new directions for international peace and security?

    Igarape Institute, 2013
    The international peace and security architecture is undergoing a profound renovation in the twenty first century. The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine is being re-evaluated from political and operational perspectives, while the Responsibility while Protecting (RwP), a Brazilian initiative, can be a new direction for international peace and security.
  • Document

    Beyond the new deal: global collaboration and peacebuilding with BRICS countries

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2014
    Development in fragile and conflict-affected contexts is both complex and contested. The New Deal for Engagement with Fragile States, endorsed by 35 countries and six organisations, is the current focus of efforts to harmonise aid approaches.
  • Document

    Defining India’s security: looking beyond limited war and cold start strategies

    Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2011
    The reciprocal India-Pakistan nuclear tests had occurred earlier in May 1998, and a state of nuclear deterrence was established thereafter between the two countries. This essay argues that the potential of the security situations spinning out of control and breaching the nuclear threshold was very real.
  • Document

    Blue helmets for Africa: India’s peacekeeping in Africa

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2010
    For the past 60 years, the United Nations has been keeping foes apart in strife-torn parts of the world, and rebuilding countries and communities afterwards. In the UN’s peace operations in Africa, India has been an active partner since its peacekeeping mission in the Congo in 1960.